Pollution may fuel depression, anxiety and other mental health problems, emerging research suggests

A growing body of research is showing how long-term exposure to air pollution may fuel depression, anxiety and other mental health problems, raising new concerns about the unseen toll of dirty air.

MEMBER EXCLUSIVE

A woman in a green and white striped sari sits crosslegged in a wooden room, looking to the right of the camera
Rukmini Manjare sits inside her home in Bubnal village. She says she has learned to sense when air pollution rises in her village, often without checking official air-quality readings.
(Image credit: Sanket Jain)

MAHARASHTRA, INDIA — In clinics and labs around the world, scientists are uncovering a consequence of air pollution that received little attention for decades: Polluted air not only damages the lungs and heart but also harms the brain.

Large studies conducted in Asia, the United States and Europe have linked long-term exposure to air pollution with a higher risk of depression, anxiety and cognitive decline, while lab- and animal-based studies hint at possible mechanisms driving this effect. Research suggests pollution may also increase the risk of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and even suicide risk.

Sanket Jain
Journalist

Sanket Jain is an independent journalist and documentary photographer based in Western India’s Maharashtra state. Sanket’s work has been featured in over 35 publications, including MIT Technology Review, Devex, Wired, Telegraph, Thomson Reuters Foundation, The Nation, British Medical Journal, Verge, USA Today, Progressive Magazine and others. He was the winner of the 2025 Eric and Wendy Schmidt Award for Excellence in Science Communications.

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